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Risk Assessment of the Transfer of Imazethapyr Herbicide Resistance from Clearfield Rice to Red Rice

Potential outcrossing between Clearfield rice and red rice will have a direct impact on the management and long-term usefulness of imazethapyr technology for rice weed control. The principal objective of this research was to determine the rate and agronomic consequences for outcrossing between Clearfield rice and red rice in south Louisiana. Collection and analysis of red rice samples across two years and 24 commercial locations indicated that red rice infestation after imazethapyr application differed substantially at different Clearfield locations. Straw hull and awnless red rice was the principal biotype observed for both years. Red rice populations possessed extensive variation for agronomic traits such as plant height, panicle length, tillers/plant, seeds/plant, seed set and grain weight. Outcrossing occurred from all Clearfield rice varieties (¡®CL121¡¯, ¡®CL141¡¯ and ¡®CL161¡¯) to red rice. An average outcrossing frequency of 0.163% was observed in red rice samples collected in 2002 with a range of 0.017% to 0.583%. A four-fold increase in outcrossing frequency of 0.679% was found in red rice samples collected in 2003 with two locations exhibiting outcrossing > 1%.
Outcrossing frequency did not correlate with any agronomic trait from the red rice samples across two years. Imazethapyr resistance was generally controlled by a single dominant gene, except in some F2 populations where significant deviations from expected resistant/susceptible ratios were detected. Similar results were observed in F2 populations for segregation of pubescent/glabrous leaves.
F1 hybrids between Clearfield rice and red rice in general did not show increased fitness in flowering characteristics over Clearfield rice, as most hybrids did not flower or produce seeds in the field. However, increased fitness in F1 hybrids, derived from red rice samples collected in 2002, was detected over Clearfield rice for plant height, tillers/plant, and panicles/plant. Enhanced fitness in F1 hybrids from red rice samples collected in 2003 over Clearfield rice was exhibited for plant height, panicle length, spikelets/panicle, and panicles/plant. Results from this study indicate that outcrossing between Clearfield and red rice will occur rapidly at rates that warrant early-season field scouting and a rotation scheme for Clearfield rice to prolong usefulness of the imazethapyr technology.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LSU/oai:etd.lsu.edu:etd-07112005-104419
Date12 July 2005
CreatorsZhang, Weiqiang
ContributorsSteve Linscombe, Eric Webster, Stephen Harrison, James Oard, James Fuxa
PublisherLSU
Source SetsLouisiana State University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-07112005-104419/
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